Genius at the End of the Hall: The Academic Duel Arc
Genius at the End of the Hall: The Academic Duel Arc
The dust was always the first thing Akira noticed every morning at Moriyama High. In the old corridor’s dull light, scraps of old test papers clung to the sunbeams. His eyes moved past it in seconds, as usual.
But today, things felt off. Whispers followed when he strode past the front lockers. Akira Hoshino wasn’t just top of his class. He’d won the city math quiz four times, could recite quantum paradoxes in three languages, and ignored every club except the Literary Society—a nearly extinct group passed down from student to student, each one hoping they could dodge real interaction. Some days, you ever wonder if there’s something too strange about that smartest kid in your school? Is pure brainpower a blessing at sixteen, or is it another kind of curse?
It wasn’t until lunch that Akira’s life split. Principal Aono caught him right by the window, polished shoes turning in, a yellow envelope pressed between ink-stained hands. She dropped the news like her cup—there’d be an Academic Duel. Five days, five events: logic, rhetoric, math, history, and experimental design. The city brought in the best pair from each major high school. The kicker? Pride, scholarships, a trophy, and national eyes on a team of two.
“So, who do I even get paired with?” Akira tried to sound bored but crumpled the milk carton a bit tighter under the table.
Minato leaned over, never blinking. Monday’s physics club hoodie hung off his tall frame, and no-one noticed the sketchbook poking out his bag. He barely bothered whispering. “They’re picking Aya.” he said, drawing Akira’s gaze with two words alone.
Aya Mihara, who outwrote seniors, out-debated the best in the city, and—so the rumors went—could make a teacher cry with one icy essay. She’d once made their philosophy teacher rewrite a whole lesson, right in front of the class.
“I can work with that,” Akira said, fighting a grin with mild panic twitching behind his eyelid. When logic meets opinion, which wins?
First session: history and rhetoric. The two were thrown into a cold conference room and faced Team Shindai from uptown. Textbooks as shields, glasses smudged, smiles sharp as blades. Competition made awkward teammates look like rivals.
Aya shot Akira a glance mid-dialogue about early Meiji reformers. “Try not to glitch out halfway, alright?” she stage-whispered. He held back a retort. There was a rhythm to this—he’d toss historical facts, she’d twist them into debate threads. Instead of clashing, their skills began to click.
Who’d have guessed serious genius came with such biting powerplay and sharp quips?

Word made it home, fast. Social feeds filled with polls. Everyone wanted to bet on Name vs Name. Statistical models trended for days. Minato gathered an archive of clips—loot for the school session halls. Data was suddenly currency, and guesses took over common chats. By day three, Akira started noticing fascination and mockery walking together right behind him.
Second event: math and spontaneous logic. Each throw, Team Sakuragawa played dirty, pivoting answers into side-swipes on character. Aya didn’t flinch, but her hands shook as she tossed notebooks at the desk after each round. Shrugging, Akira shut out all sound but Ava’s hissing corrections and frantic scribble. After round three, he managed a whisper back to her, sharp but almost kind. “Less fight, more math, okay?”
Third event: design and memory work under time limits. There, old rivalries hit their peak—turns out, Team Shindai’s Yuuta couldn’t stand losing. His green eyes flicked to Akira’s paper every chance he got. Who wouldn’t search for clues when top rank just slipped up? Their coach nearly tossed a whiteboard halfway through when Yuuta protested a ruling. Aya folded her arms. “I guess memory’s not your strong suit when you don’t do the work, huh?” The silence afterward cut ten degrees off the room’s heat.
But Akira was running on fumes. By Thursday, burnout was real. “Do you ever stop?” he murmured at Aya behind a postered pillar. She stared back.
“If you quit, everyone in this hall blames the both of us. So no, I don’t.” Her voice stuck with him long after everyone left the hall.
Night fell, corridor lights flickered, and data pinned up in the faculty arc—the finals would be a head-to-head with Nishiki High. The winners? Decision on Friday, live, all eyes glued to school and city. Akira slept badly, mind chasing strange patterns and worries that made night stretch into an unfriendly maze.
Friday was rain. Aya was waiting at the door before first bell, copper hair out of its clip. Her eyes were hollower today, but her stare was plenty sharp. “Let’s show them how teamwork’s done, Hoshino. After all, they’d never vote on us if they weren’t a bit scared already.”
Last event: hybrid, math-meets-logic, live streamed. Time limits brutal. Akira got one problem out before flipping his pad at Aya in panic. “Your side, fast—you know those constraints better!” There wasn’t a pause; she was on it, firing the result back in five spare words. The back-and-forth sparks tripped even the judges into stunned silence for a moment. Sweat beaded, time nearly up, Akira scored the closing solution at the third-to-final second.

Bells sounded. Results would wait until evening—calculations rechecked, live on stream. Counselors dropped in congratulations, false calm, waiting for that spike of announcement that settles all young years. The crowd in homeroom queued up. Minato threw his cap at Akira and shook Aya’s hand.
A quiet confession under the stairs: “I did want to beat you myself. But that would make less of a story.”
She almost smiled. “Try again next year.” Did you have rivalries grow bud-like in semesters of sharp words? Did winning almost hurt more than losing for you?
Just past sunset, the PA system buzzed; the results lost in static. “…Team Moriyama High—tie brake result determined on revision. City winners: Akira Hoshino and Aya Mihara.” Cheers hit the hall. Akira smiled and tried not to look at his shaking hands.

After official photos and wind-down, Aya pulled aside Akira by the school fence. She didn’t meet his gaze. “Why do I feel sorry for them?” she said, nodding back at their rivals sobbing in the car park. He didn’t answer, only watched the moon peer through low clouds.
He wondered about the kid in the back of the crowd—the one mixing formulas on sticky notes, hoping for their first shot next cycle. Was all this worth as much as it felt tonight? Whispers followed their steps. Ambition isn’t simple, but maybe that’s the gift you get for growing up smart.
A long ring peeled through empty hallways. Exams were over, but something deeper was launched and swirling inside those empty stairways, promising that not all genius fits neat around a test or a prize. How would you feel standing in Akira’s shoes at sixteen? What comes next, if you already climbed this far?
The story ends for now, sharp against the hope and ache left floating in last bell silence.
